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Ozette Triangle: Cape Alava - Sand Point Loop

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With sea stacks, sea otters, sea lions, and ocean scenery for as far as you can see, the 9.4-mile Ozette Triangle is one of the finest hikes on the Olympic Coast. Easily accessible and a loop hike, the Triangle (named for the loop's shape) is a perfect introduction to America's wildest coastline south of Alaska. You won't be alone on this section of wilderness beach, however, for Ozette's admirers are legion. But there's plenty of room, and if you venture this way on a winter weekday you might just find yourself alone with the harlequin ducks.

From Lake Ozette, one of the largest natural bodies of freshwater in the state, the loop begins its 3.3-mile journey to the sea. Cross the lazy and brackish Ozette River on an arched bridge, coming to a junction in 0.25 mile. Take the trail right (the left trail is your return route), proceeding through a thick forest of western cedar and Sitka spruce. Most of the way is via a cedar-planked boardwalk, convenient for traversing the saturated terrain but slippery during periods of rain. The Park Service has begun replacing many of the rotting cedar planks with nonslippery plastic ones.

Continue through lush maritime forests drenched in sea mist. Towering ferns line the elevated path, and in early spring the boardwalk is lined with thousands of nature's lanterns: blossoming skunk cabbage. At 2.25 miles pass through Ahlstroms Prairie, an early homestead site long-since reclaimed by the dense greenery that thrives in this waterlogged climate.

Raucous gulls and the sound of crashing surf announce that the ocean is nearing, and at 3.3 miles a slight descent delivers you to the wild beaches of Cape Alava. Now for real fun! Turn south and follow the shoreline for 3.1 adventurous miles. Look out to offshore islands. Search the ocean waters for seals, whales, and scores of pelagic birds. Look in tidal pools for semisubmerged starfish tenaciously clinging to barnacle-encrusted walls. Look for oystercatchers cruising down the aisles of this open fish market. Look up in the towering trees hugging the shoreline for perched eagles.

Search for Makah petroglyphs etched into the Wedding Rocks, a cluster of shore-hugging boulders about halfway along the coast. Respect these historic and sacred artifacts, which predate European settlement in the Northwest. If the tide is low, continue along the surf. If it is high, use the steep but short trails (signed) that bound over rough headlands. Continue on wide beach and approach another spot that may require a detour if the surf is high.

At 3 miles from Cape Alava and after 6.3 miles of hiking, you'll arrive at Sand Point. Over 2 glorious miles of some of the finest sandy beaches in all of Washington extend south from this point.

When you must relinquish this heavenly environment back to its rightful owners-the seals, oystercatchers, otters, and sanderlings-return to Lake Ozette via another 3-mile-long boardwalk trail through expansive cedar bogs and under a dense canopy of majestic Sitka spruce. The sound of the surf slowly fades in the distance, but the Ozette Triangle will chime in your memories for quite some time.
Driving Directions:

From Port Angeles follow US 101 west for 5 miles to the junction with State Route 112. Turn right (west) on SR 112, continuing for 46 miles to the community of Sekiu. (Alternatively, take US 101 to Sappho and drive SR 113 north to SR 112 and then on to Sekiu. This way is longer, but not as curvy.) Drive 2.5 miles beyond Sekiu and turn left onto the Hoko-Ozette Road. Follow this paved road for 21 miles to the Ozette Ranger Station and trailhead. Water and restrooms available.

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Recent Trip Reports

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There are 96 trip reports for this hike. See all trip reports for this hike.
Ozette Triangle: Cape Alava - Sand Point Loop — May 04, 2012 — PNA
Day hike
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Not much to report from this hike. Trails are about usual. There's been a lot of recent brushing, ...
Not much to report from this hike. Trails are about usual. There's been a lot of recent brushing, particularly on the Sand Point Trail. There's flagging implying that a fair bit of the oldest boardwalk on Sand Point is being replaced with new turnpike. A few campers at Alava, none at Sand Point.

A few Trillia and swamp lanterns blooming, and Romanzoffia tracyi; and, best of all, bog laurels blooming on the Alava trail.

Not a lot in the way of wildlife - a sea otter off Alava, some deer, some fox or coyote tracks on the beach, and some very small bear tracks on the beach. A few bald eagles and mergansers and such, as well.

2 weeks ago I was out here, also, and crossed the Ozette River at low tide - not more than knee deep at a zero level. The beach north of Ozette River I wouldn't want to be on at a high tide.
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Ozette Triangle: Cape Alava - Sand Point Loop — Dec 04, 2011 — Mr. Pays-Bas
Day hike
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First of all, a compliment to the people and organisations that built and now maintain the many mile...
First of all, a compliment to the people and organisations that built and now maintain the many miles of boardwalk!

I set out with a friend on this crisp December morning. In several places the board walk was frozen. It required special attention not to slip and fall. Coming to the beach we found the tide was out. Just great to be out there with the sun shining and the beach empty. We were surprised by a white owl taking of from the point where it was resting, circling over our heads and disappear into the forest.
What need I tell? We hiked, we talked geology, we sat and had lunch in the sun, we gazed at The Wedding Rocks, and finally we arrived at Sand Point.
Back on the damp board walk we came across some (still or already again) frozen spots. It was difficult, therefore, to enjoy the forest as well. Nevertheless, a wonderful hike!
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Ozette Triangle: Cape Alava - Sand Point Loop — Sep 24, 2011 — banana slug
Day hike
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Since I hadn’t hiked this loop (or triangle) trail before, I checked at the ranger station to ...


Since I hadn’t hiked this loop (or triangle) trail before, I checked at the ranger station to see which initial direction would be the better choice. The ranger pointed out that going right at the junction towards Cape Alava gets the more difficult beach walk over first, as you have to climb over or go under fallen trees along the shoreline. But since we were going to be on the beach as the tide was falling, he said we would be able to walk out onto the rocks when trees became an obstacle. The other factor to consider he said was the wind. With the wind coming from the south, he recommended taking the Sand Point Trail so we would have the wind at our backs walking north along the shoreline.

The trail to Sand Point takes you through Sitka Spruce, some huge, on an elevated boardwalk so you are looking down at the moss, Deer Fern, Salal, Evergreen Huckleberry and Skunk Cabbage that cover the forest floor. The boardwalk and elevated gravel beds made hiking easy down to the beach. We knew we were getting close to the beach when besides the roar of the ocean we heard the waves lapping against the shore. We made our way north along the beach, stopping to observe the Harlequin Ducks and Oyster Catchers before pausing for lunch and finding the amazing petroglyphs on both on the north and south side of the Wedding Rocks headland. The stretch of beach after Wedding Rocks did prove to be more difficult, as the rocks and seaweed were very slippery. So after a bit of trial and error (slipping and falling) we found that climbing over and under the trees was the better choice. The wind had picked up in the afternoon so we were glad it was on our backs as we reached Cape Alava. Enjoyed again the boardwalk back up to the Lake Ozette campground.
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Ozette Triangle: Cape Alava - Sand Point Loop — Aug 07, 2011 — Stefani
Day hike
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Camped at the trail head Saturday night for an "early" start Sunday. We started on the North Sand Po...
Camped at the trail head Saturday night for an "early" start Sunday. We started on the North Sand Point Trail. Along the trail a gentleman told us he preferred starting from the other way...we agreed at the end, it would probably be a little easier.

Overcast but not cold. Saw some seals on a rock not too far off the beach. A doe and her baby came out onto the beach halfway through, they weren't scared and just walked alone the coast a little ways. Baby made some cute cooing sounds trying to catch up with mom.

Lots of backpackers and day hikers. Really neat to see all the petroglyphs.

On the way back, along the Cape Alava Trail, a man came out from a side trail andtold us about the old barn that is back there. We checked it out...never would have noticed the little trail heading back there on our own. The barn is still fully standing and he said the remains of the house were a little farther back, but we didnt search for it.

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Ozette Triangle: Cape Alava - Sand Point Loop — Jul 28, 2011 — trailsad44
Multi-night backpack
Issues: Blowdowns
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Weather was the largest factor for fun. The forest is pretty, quiet, and humid if it's a warm day. ...
Weather was the largest factor for fun. The forest is pretty, quiet, and humid if it's a warm day. But the beaches are what this hike is all about.

Ozette-Cape Alava(CA): Boardwalk is being repaired but serves no major obstacles. Driftwood-fires are allowed on the beach at CA.

CA-Sand Point(SP): Watch for tides when rounding marked rocks and points. Wedding Rocks have rock carvings (petroglyphs). It's worth exploring the rocks and looking for them. Some downed trees made walking on the beach difficult at points, but nothing that ducking and climbing over a couple of logs couldn't fix. SP mosquitoes were out when the breeze died down.

SP-Ozette: Flat, pretty, and the boardwalk was in good condition.

A fun hike when you have good weather and time to relax at the beach.
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Sand Point elwert.jpg
Sand Point at Dusk, By Daniel Ewert.
Location
Cape Alava-Sand Point Loop (##31)
Olympics -- Coast
Olympic National Park
Statistics
Roundtrip 9.4 miles
Elevation Gain 300 ft
Highest Point 350 ft
Features
Coast
Wildlife
Established campsites
User info
Good for kids
Dogs not allowed
No pass or permit required
Guidebooks & Maps
Overnight camping permits required
Green Trails Ozette No. 130S
Custom Correct Ozette Beach Loop

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